Social attraction mediates collective foraging decisions in invasive hornets

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Abstract

Group-living animals commonly use social information to better locate and exploit resources. In many insects, birds, fish and mammals, this can lead to collective foraging decisions by which animals share a single food source among alternatives of equal qualities. Here, we report collective foraging decisions in a social wasp, the yellow-legged hornet Vespa velutina nigrithorax , a major predator of bees and other terrestrial invertebrates invasive across Asia, Europe and North America. When given a choice between two identical liquid food sources (feeders or traps containing sugar solutions), wild hornets distributed asymmetrically on the two options, and this phenomenon was more frequent as group size increased. Priming one of the food sources with dead hornets predictably biased the collective choices towards this particular option, irrespective of whether the dead insects were conspecifics or hornets from a closely related species. Inter-attraction in yellow-legged hornets is thus a passive and non-specific mechanism, possibly mediated by visual or chemical cues displayed by dead hornets. This collective behaviour may provide important foraging advantages to hornets invading new territories and bring new perspectives for population control.

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